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Prime Minister Trudeau's climate policies are being swamped by his simultaneous push for massive expansions in climate pollution.

The numbers speak for themselves. Here they are along with a chart to put them all into context.

What Trudeau promised

Since being elected, Trudeau has repeatedly promised that Canada will do its part to keep dangerous climate disruption to "well below" a 2 degree Celsius increase in global warming. When signing the Paris Climate Accord, along with over 190 other nations, Trudeau committed Canada to a 30 per cent reduction in our climate pollution by 2030. That's 200 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (MtCO2) less than we emit now. My "CO2 Scorecard" chart below shows this promised action in the first column.

More recently, the Trudeau government reported that the path to a 2 degree future requires an 80 per cent cut in Canadian climate pollution by 2050. Time is running short in the fight for a safe climate future, and the required cuts keep getting steeper.

Clean policies, small-impact

Since signing the Paris Climate Accord, Trudeau has rolled out two high-profile climate policies. Both got heaps of praise in the media. But as the scorecard chart clearly shows, the actual reductions in Canada's climate pollution will be relatively small.

CLEAN POLICY #1: Coal-free by 2030. Yes, it sounds impressive. But in reality Canada doesn't burn much coal. And we already had federal and provincial polices in place to phase it out. Trudeau's splashy new policy accelerates the phase out but it will only reduce our nation's climate pollution by 5 MtCO2 in 2030 compared to what was already planned. This reduction is illustrated in column two of the scorecard. It's not even 3 per cent of what's needed by 2030.

CLEAN POLICY #2: Carbon Tax. This feel-good new policy also generated lots of favourable headlines. Unfortunately, as the third column shows, it delivers less than a tenth of what's needed for 2030. That's according to estimates by EnviroEconomics. It's far too little to hold off the flood from surging fossil fuel extraction.

Massive dirty approvals.

BIG & DIRTY #1: Petronas PNW LNG. Trudeau recently approved this gigantic liquid natural gas (LNG) proposal. The approval green lights an entirely new fossil fuel industry in Canada: LNG. Extracting and processing all the fracked gas will emit approximately 12 MtCO2 in British Columbia. This threatens to overwhelm B.C.'s entire legal, moral and ethical climate budget for 2050, which is just 13 MtCO2. British Columbia promised to cut emissions 80 per cent by 2050 – right in line with what the Trudeau government says we all must do. Yet Trudeau handed nearly all of these most critical emission rights in B.C. to a Malaysian state-owned corporation. What's everyone else supposed to do? The full lifecycle of all that LNG will exceed 70 MtCO2.

BIG & DIRTY #2: TransCanada Keystone XL. Trudeau asked for it. He "steadfastly" supports it. U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has promised "100 percent" to approve it. This mega-project will pump up to 190 MtCO2 per year. That is more than the combined emissions of the 100 least climate polluting nations. Nearly 30 MtCO2 will be emitted in Alberta to extract the the extra bitumen. As the scorecard chart makes clear, this alone will more than wipe out the climate savings from both of Trudeau's signature climate policies – the 2030 coal phase out and the carbon tax.

BIG & DIRTY #3: Doubling Enbridge Line 3. Trudeau is almost certain to approve Enbridge's Line 3 expansion. This mega-expansion would carry another 80 MtCO2 per year. Roughly 12 MtCO2 of that would be emitted in Alberta to extract the bitumen.

BIG & DIRTY #4: Tripling Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain (TMX). A few days after the Line 3 decision, Trudeau will decide whether to allow a tripling of Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline. He is widely expected to approve this bitumen-expansion project as well. This would pump an additional 125 MtCO2 worth of bitumen each year. Trudeau will need to force it through bitterly opposed B.C. communities.

BIG & DIRTY #5: TransCanada Energy East. Just … wow.

Running up the down escalator

Meanwhile, the International Energy Agency (IEA) calculates that fossil oil production must start falling if humanity wants to limit dangerous climate changes to less than 2 degrees in global warming. Clearly that's not what Trudeau plans to do.

Canada has increased its emissions in each of the last five years. In fact our climate pollution has gotten so bad that we no longer bother talking about our upcoming 2020 international climate commitment. Remember that? The U.S. is pushing to meet their identical 2020 commitment. Europe already has. But in Canada we gave up trying long ago.

How much longer will Canada's pattern of climate failure continue? How long do we want it too? And if our new clean-talking Prime Minister isn't going to change our course, who will?

------ Notes on the climate pollution math --------

PETRONAS PNW LNG – The federal government's "Draft Environmental Assessment Report" for this project states that BC emissions from it are projected to range from 11 to 13 MtCO2 per year through 2050 and beyond. The report also states that these levels are "high in magnitude, continuous, irreversible and global in extent ... likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects." That is just to extract and process the LNG. Burning it will release another 60 MtCO2. BC's legislated 2050 climate target is 13 MtCO2.

PROPOSED OIL PIPELINES -- Environment Canada estimates 90 kgCO2 is emitted to extract each barrel of bitumen. A study by Oil Change International estimates 520 kgCO2 is released when each barrel of bitumen is burned. That's approximately 600 kgCO2/bbl in total.Here is a list of the biggest of the proposed pipelines with capacities & lifecycle CO2 from the oil based on 600 kgCO2/barrel:

TransCanada Keystone XL: 890 thousand barrels a day (kb/d). 324 million barrels per year (mb/y). 195 MtCO2 per year from oil.

The math is clear, if these estimates are anywhere near accurate. We've been had, by another snake oil salesman, albeit better looking than Donald Trump. So what is it we must do?

In another article in todays edition of the National Observer, we are told business leaders are on side with a carbon tax. Our right wing politicians continue to stir up resistance to that on the ground. Meanwhile, the figures in this article suggest we are being duped by a politician who is either a psychopathic liar, or too superficial to understand the consequences of his nods to mega fossil fuel projects.

How do we make it clear to both sets of feet draggers what the next century is going to be like...for all of us...if we don't stop posturing and start acting????

How do we convey the deadly threat we all labour under....and the need to action now.....not at the last minute. We aren't goinig to pull out of this nose dive at the last minute. in fact, we may have trouble avoiding catastrophe if we begin tomorrow.

HOW DO WE GET THAT THROUGH EVERYONE'S HEAD??? Including the head of our PM?

To compare "apples to apples" the 200 Mt promise to achieve our 2030 target should be compared against emissions in Canada (i.e., the upstream extraction emissions, but not the downstream burning emissions). The bitumen pipelines are not likely to increase global demand for oil significantly, unless they contribute to so much oversupply that global prices drop and demand increases substantially in response. Even in that scenario, only a fraction of the burning emissions should be counted against the 200 Mt promise. Your case is strong enough without the burning emissions - the upstream extraction emissions from these projects overwhelm any existing climate policies. Including the burning emissions seems like a stretch (i.e., an example of motivated reasoning).

When will so-called leaders get to REDUCING our footprints? Along with pollution taxes, we need to get vehicles off the road, by making mass transit dirt cheap and driving to work even more costly. Gas pigs like Hummers and supercars need specific taxes for inefficiency - several grand per year directed to programs subsidizing small scale transition to green power. Real car sharing programs (not to be confused with Uber, which is a taxi service) should be everywhere, along with carpool groups. We need pedestrian and cyclist friendly streets and roads, because cities like Calgary not only design against walking, they have made it impossible to get to many parts of the city by foot. We complain that we have to drive because of winter, yet countries like Norway are filled with winter cyclists. Many jobs could easily be done from home at least part of the week. Paris made huge reductions by legislating business lights be shut off at night when they are closed, yet something so obvious is still ignored here. Banning non-LED lights - including xmas lights - is needed also. Overpopulation is crisis #1 and driving global warming, yet the subject is being made taboo. Countries are doing nothing to stop huge birthrates, yet rely on subsidies from other countries for the most basic needs. It can't continue and with aquafers across North America running dry, we will be in similar straits in a few decades. We need this on the world stage as well.